Is Estradiol a Genotoxic Mutagenic Carcinogen?1
The natural hormone 17β-estradiol (E2) induces tumors in various organs of rats, mice, and hamsters. In humans, slightly elevated circulating estrogen levels caused either by increased endogenous hormone production or by therapeutic doses of estrogen medications increase breast or uterine cancer ris...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Endocrine reviews 2000-02, Vol.21 (1), p.40-54 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The natural hormone 17β-estradiol (E2) induces
tumors in various organs of rats, mice, and hamsters. In humans,
slightly elevated circulating estrogen levels caused either by
increased endogenous hormone production or by therapeutic doses of
estrogen medications increase breast or uterine cancer risk. Several
epigenetic mechanisms of tumor induction by this hormone have been
proposed based on its lack of mutagenic activity in bacterial and
mammalian cell test systems. More recent evidence supports a dual role
of estrogen in carcinogenesis as a hormone stimulating cell
proliferation and as a procarcinogen inducing genetic damage. Tumors
may be initiated by metabolic conversion of E2 to
4-hydroxyestradiol catalyzed by a specific 4-hydroxylase (CYP1B1) and
by further activation of this catechol to reactive semiquinone/quinone
intermediates. Several types of direct and indirect free
radical-mediated DNA damage are induced by E2,
4-hydroxyestradiol, or its corresponding quinone in cell-free systems,
in cells in culture, and/or in vivo. E2 also
induces various chromosomal and genetic lesions including aneuploidy,
chromosomal aberrations, gene amplification, and microsatellite
instability in cells in culture and/or in vivo and gene
mutations in several cell test systems. These data suggest that
E2 is a weak carcinogen and weak mutagen capable of
inducing genetic lesions with low frequency. Tumors may develop by
hormone receptor-mediated proliferation of such damaged cells. |
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ISSN: | 0163-769X 1945-7189 |
DOI: | 10.1210/edrv.21.1.0386 |